Strategic Behavior in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Ezra Van Negri Faculty Advisor: Christopher Kingston May 3, 2012 Submitted to the Department of Economics at Amherst College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts with honors. Abstract Over the past 60 years, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been a focal point of Middle Eastern politics. Since the 1990s, the two sides have attempted to resolve their land dispute and cease the ongoing cycle of violence. Although it is clear that these hostilities are costly and a peace agreement would be mutually beneficial, the sides have been unable to negotiate a deal. I take an economic approach to the conflict to explain this paradox as well as the dynamics of the interaction over the past 25 years. To do this, I adapt a model developed by Ethan Bueno de Mesquita (2005) that explains the interaction between a government and the moderate and extremist factions of a terrorist dissident group. My additions emphasize the political party of the government and differentiate between concessions and final status peace agreements. Applying the model to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, I look at a number of key junctures – the 1996 Israeli election, the 2000-01 final status negotiations, and the 2005 Gaza withdrawal – and the strategies each side employed. Each of these events defied Bueno de Mesquita‘s explanations, but can be rationalized with my adaptations. I conclude that a peace deal requires, at minimum, a confluence of two elements to be successful: a left wing Israeli leadership (e.g. Labour) and a strong Palestinian moderate faction (Fatah). The model shows, conversely, that the current presence of a Likud-led Israeli government and a popular, consolidated, and militarily strong Palestinian extremist group (Hamas) narrows or even eliminates the bargaining space, cutting off deals that would make the majority of people on both sides better off. Keywords: game theory, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, conflict, commitment problems i Acknowledgments I would like to thank my economics classmates for providing humor and perspective to this process. I would also like to thank Don Negri and Lillian Kivel for their thoughts, edits, and support. Most of all, I would like to thank Professor Kingston. Without his guidance, critiques, questions, and dedication, I would not have been able to complete this project. ii Contents 1 Introduction 1 2 Literature Review 2 2.1 The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict 3 2.2 Conflict and Conflict Resolution 4 3 History 7 3.1 The Warring Period: 1948 – 1988 7 3.2 Game Theoretic Rationale for the Warring Period 9 3.3 The Negotiation Period: 1988 – Present 10 4 A Formal Model 13 5 Adaptations 20 5.1 Differing Land Valuations 21 5.2 Concessions versus Final Status Agreements 23 6 Application 26 6.1 Evidence for Differing Land Valuations 27 6.2 Evidence for Changes in Lambda 30 6.3 The Failed 2000-01 Final Status Negotiations 33 6.4 Rising Tensions: 2001 – 2005 39 6.5 Israel’s Unilateral Withdrawal from Gaza 40 6.6 Diplomatic Deadlock: 2006 and Beyond 44 7 Conclusions 46 8 References 48 iii 1 Introduction On May 19th 2011, President Barack Obama, in a seminal speech on the Middle East, pledged his commitment to ending the more than six-decade old conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians. Yet he, like the presidents before him, has been unable to bring an end to the violence and failed negotiations that have characterized the past 25 years. Despite the perception that a resolution to the conflict would be extremely difficult, its continuing nature remains a paradox. Why would the two sides continue a violent cycle of attacks and retaliation when both would certainly be better off making a deal to live in peace? Scholars have advanced a number of explanations for the failure of Israel and Palestine to reach a comprehensive of peace agreement. Some point to conflicting national identity narratives, others to an unwillingness to compromise on religious lands, and others still on inept leadership and infighting (Bar-Siman-Tov 2010). Yet, unless we accept the absurd premise that they get positive net benefits from the conflict, logic tells us that there exists some agreement that would make both sides better off. What, then, are the reasons that Israel and Palestine have been unable to reach such an agreement? This is where an economic approach can be illuminating. With the presumption of rationality, I use game theory to help explain not just the continuing nature of the Israeli- Palestinian conflict, but also a number of its internal puzzles. The model I present elucidates why, for example, Yasser Arafat rejected Israel‘s offer of an independent Palestinian state in 2000 and why Israel unilaterally withdrew from Gaza in 2005, despite these events being ostensibly irrational. There is a rich literature on both conflict in general and on the Israel-Palestinian conflict in particular. This project differs from preceding research in its close focus on the 1 conflict itself. Most other authors have used the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as an example or application to help advance a particular model they develop. I do not know of any other papers, however, that attempt to explain the dynamics of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in their entirety. To that end, I adapt a model presented by Ethan Bueno de Mesquita in his paper ―Conciliation, Counterterrorism, and Patterns of Terrorist Violence‖ (2005). While Bueno de Mesquita‘s model explains the rises and falls in the level of violence observed from 1990 to 2001, it ultimately falls short in explaining the breakdown of peace talks in the latter half of the 1990s, the rejected 2001 final status agreement, and many of the events following 2005. Therefore, I offer two adaptations that capture important elements missing from Bueno de Mesquita‘s model. These modifications allow me to explain the pattern of events from 1988 until today, and also yield theoretical predictions as to the main barriers to future peace deals. This paper proceeds as follows. In Section 2, I review the relevant literature on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, in particular, and on conflict more generally. In Section 3, I present a potted history of Israel since its independence in 1948, offering cursory explanations for early events and a justification for my consideration of the modern period. In Section 4, I present the Bueno de Mesquita model that forms the basis of my analysis. In Section 5, I offer two adaptations to his model that capture essential omitted factors in the conflict. In Section 6, I apply the model to the conflict and argue for its usefulness in understanding the dynamics of recent interactions. Finally, Section 7 concludes and points to necessary conditions for a future peace deal. 2 Literature Review 2 The existing literature relevant to my study falls broadly into two categories: articles on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and more general articles on conflict and its resolution. 2.1 The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict There is a wide variety of literature on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, mostly from a political science perspective. For example, Rowley and Taylor (2006) review the conflict from its ancient origins to the establishment of Israel in 1948. The authors highlight the long history of fighting over land that both Jews and Muslims consider sacred. Most articles, however, focus on the modern period following the establishment of Israel. Abu-Qarn (2008) looks at the economic aspects of the Israeli-Arab conflict over the past six decades. Beyond a broad historical review, Abu-Qarn highlights how a peace agreement would be mutually beneficial. Studies such as El-Naggar and El-Erian (1993), Fischer, et. al. (1993), and Gleditsch, et. al. (1996) examine the many facets of a so-called ―peace dividend.‖ These gains include ―reduced military expenditure and channeling of the resources to more productive sectors, increased private investment and foreign inflows, and increased regional integration and trade‖ (Abu-Qarn 6). Finally, Rowley and Webb (2007) look at how the history of the Israel-Palestine conflict has made current peace negotiations more difficult. The authors contend that weak political systems and a history of ―deep-rooted malevolence‖ have made peace negotiations entail very high transaction costs. These transaction costs are why the Coase theorem – which posits that with good information and low transaction costs two sides should be able to negotiate a mutually beneficial agreement – does not apply in this setting (Rowley and Webb 2007). 3 Overall, the literature on the conflict underscores how economic, political, and historical differences create barriers to a successful peace agreement, which scholars believe would certainly be mutually beneficial. These historical facts are important when considering how to apply the literature on conflict to the Israeli-Palestinian case. 2.2 Conflict and Conflict Resolution Most of the economic scholarship on conflict centers on war and its causes. James Fearon‘s ―Rationalist Explanations for War‖ (1995) focuses on how wars originate when the sides are unable to solve disagreements with bargaining. Fearon presents three mechanisms that reduce or eliminate the bargaining space: issue indivisibility, private information and incentives to misrepresent, and commitment problems. Of these, Fearon discredits the first because of the possibility of linkages with other issues and side- payments. For example, ownership over a sacred site may be indivisible, but in practice plans to share visitation rights, have international oversight, or split administration of two sacred sites can work around these difficulties. For the second cause, Fearon highlights how asymmetric information can bring about war, mostly through disagreements or miscalculations about relative power and incentives to misrepresent this information. Fearon summarizes this point: While states always have incentives to locate a peaceful bargain cheaper than war, they also always have incentives to do well in the bargaining.
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